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DISTRIBUTION OF NOTES AND COINS IN INDIA
Currency Conference 2002 Honolulu, Hawaii (Some slides have been added in the presentation for clarity) Reserve Bank of India
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India – A Huge Country Population: 1 billion North to South: 3,200 km
West to East: 3,000 km Area: 3,288,000 sq. km Per-capita Income Reserve Bank of India
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Distribution of Currency -Dimension (value)
Rs.2,448 billion, i.e., US $ 49 billion currently Reserve Bank of India
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Distribution of Currency - Dimensions (volume)
41 billion pieces in 2002 Reserve Bank of India
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Dimensions – Enormous volume of lower denominations
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Dimensions – Too little value of the lower denominations
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Agencies Involved Reserve Bank of India
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Flow of Notes & Coins Public NOTES COINS Chest branches
Chest branches & RBI Offices Public 4 mint-linked RBI Offices RBI Offices Presses 4 Mints Reserve Bank of India
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Network of Currency Chests
RBI is located only in 18 places for currency operations Distribution of notes and coins throughout the country is done through designated bank branches, called chests Chest is a receptacle in a commercial bank to store notes and coins on behalf of the Reserve Bank Deposit into chest leads to credit of the commercial bank’s account and withdrawal, debit Reserve Bank of India
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More on Currency Chest Meets currency requirement of public
Withdraws unfit notes Exchange facility from one denomination to another Payment requirement of the Government Exchange of mutilated notes Avoids frequent movement of cash Chest branch operates with minimum cash balance Reserve Bank of India
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Currency Chest Mechanism
Net deposit /withdrawal of notes and coins at the chest is reported on daily basis to parent Issue Office Overall deposit or withdrawal leads to credit or debit of bank’s account in RBI Net withdrawal from chests means expansion of currency and deposits means contraction Notes in circulation being the liability of RBI, it adjusts its asset-liability position centrally for such expansion or contraction Reserve Bank of India
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Movement of Treasure Specially built trucks for short distance (journey completed during the day) Railways for long distance Guarded by police Remittance accompanied by officials of RBI to chests Further movement from chest to a branch done by the bank concerned Reserve Bank of India
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How much to print & mint Incremental needs Replacement needs
Reserve Needs Statistical analysis and long-term forecast Printing/minting allocated between the presses/mints and delivery schedule decided in advance Reserve Bank of India
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Capacity of Presses & Mints
Total annual capacity of Presses: 18 bn Can print up to 28 bn with two shifts Total minting capacity: 4,700 mn RBI’s annual needs: Notes: about 12,000 mn pieces Coins: about 5,000 mn pieces Reserve Bank of India
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Challenges of Distribution
Size of the country and volume of currency Security and availability of railway wagons when required Political boundaries defining jurisdiction of Issue Offices lead to sub-optimal logistics Cross movement of currency is unavoidable Reserve Bank of India
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Cross-movement of Currency
Fresh Notes/Coins from Press/Mint pass on to the banks/public only through RBI offices – hence cross-movement Reserve Bank of India
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Challenges of Distribution (contd)
Security- police is preoccupied with other activities of priority Private security is unavailable and not favoured Transport through railways involves enormous coordination of logistics Privatization of transport – introduced recently in respect of coins only Reserve Bank of India
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Supply Bottleneck Scarce Printing capacity for over a decade till 1999
Pace of replacement of old currency was slow leading to deteriorating quality Inefficiencies in arranging return flow of notes as chests hardly sorted notes as fit/unfit Temporary respite through imports in (3.6 bn pieces) Reserve Bank of India
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Problem of plenty - the present transition
Enough printing capacity since 1999 Governor announces clean note policy All RBI offices receive enough fresh note supply; vaults full with old and new notes Chests overflowing with soiled/unsorted notes An apparent impasse Reserve Bank of India
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Breaking the impasse Capacity to process and destroy notes in RBI needed to increase so that Stock of soiled notes within RBI could be destroyed releasing vault space Expeditious withdrawal of notes from chests could be initiated Reserve Bank of India
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Breaking the impasse Special methods announced enabling higher output in processing Installation of processing systems (BPS 1060S) in 9 Offices Shredding & briquetting in all offices Million pieces Reserve Bank of India
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Coin Distribution – Some new steps
Mobile van at city centres Distribution through milk cooperatives in the state of Gujarat Through Post Offices in rural areas – a beginning made in Maharashtra Coin dispensing machines in public places and bank branches Issue of notes of lower denominations to bulk users by RBI is compulsorily accompanied by issue of some part in coins Reserve Bank of India
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Early results Clean Note Policy made a success
Currency processing systems have stabilized in operation Modernization of mints show results Import of coins and temporary printing of Rs.5 notes has improved the supply position Reserve Bank of India
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Meeting the challenge of distribution
The volume should be contained within sustainable levels by Shift in printing from lower to next higher denominations (a perceptible shift already visible) Coinise Rs.10 denomination Try out other substrate for printing – coating of paper or polymer, although currently there is no plan to introduce polymer notes. Banks have been compelled to dispense with the age-old practice of stapling of notes Sorting of notes to get decentralized through banks or processing centres Reserve Bank of India
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Thank you Reserve Bank of India
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